Does canonical links rank in Google?
-
Our company has many pages that use the canonical tag. Will these pages rank in the search engine or will it pass the strength on to the original page?
-
He is referring to the rel next and prev canonical tags. That tagging is critical for proper indexing of paginating pages.
-
It's not passing strength or passing PR because of the tag, it's just suggesting to Google that you would prefer they rank the canonicalled page instead - which they may or may not decide to do depending on the content on the page and the canonicalled page.
-
I just posted this in another question. It should answer your question.
For Google's definition of the canonical tag refer below.
http://support.google.com/webmast...
rel=canonical just means that http://www.example.com/widget/searching=page2 - will have a canonical tag to http://www.example.com/widget. That way link juice and indexing will not be split between the duplicate pages. That way the original /widget link is more authoritative.
It will likely increase SERP because Google will not spread your juice to other deep links. All likes like page2-3-4-5-6-7-8 will all go to page1- which is the original page. Removes duplicate content which can help you too.
-
Does a page that use the canonical link give any strength or weight to the main page.
If I have a page that already ranks pretty well and I have a page that is canonical will that help increase the SERP or will the page have little or no impact from the canonical page?
-
It will still rank but your original page will be priority. If you don't want those other pages to rank you can noindex or use robots txt.
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
How to make google crawl our repository to make our site rank but make sure users dont go to our repository ?
We have a website that has links to documents related to various sectors. But the challenge is we do not have the documents on the website itself and they are linked to our document repository that has been blocked to google. We have put nofollow and noindex to the repository. Since Google can not read those documents, it has resulted in an impact in our SEO ranking. What would be the best way to make Google crawl the PDF documents in the repository at the same time make it invisible the "repo" not appear in the search engines. Would dofollow and noindex sequence work ?
SEO Learn Center | | PracticalActionDigital0 -
SEO for business owners course link?
Hi, something I saw a few weeks back.. something Rand was doing titled something like 'SEO for business owners'? Could someone be so kind as to post the link (I'm sure i didn't imagine this!) Thanks 🙂
SEO Learn Center | | GregDixson0 -
Index Page Dropped From Rankings
On average my site was getting ranked 3rd for "Tucson DUI Lawyer", Best Tucson DUI Lawyer, Tucson DUI attorney and etc. Recently my website fell for all of these keywords and I thought it is the best time to launch the new website. The problem is that my internal pages show up for some of the keywords on the third or fourth page but my index page doesn't show for any of them. Does it have anything to do with the site structure ? I have a lot of news excerpts on the homepage with links to the main posts. Here is the link: http://www.michaelharwinlaw.com/ Any help is sincerely appreciated.
SEO Learn Center | | yasinyaqoobi0 -
How I can I get quality Linking C Blocks:
I tried to research how to get such links and no luck can someone help
SEO Learn Center | | corporacionmx0 -
How to ask Google to remove old pages that don't exist
I have moved a site to a new location. There are a number of pages that date back to 2012 and 2011 and we do not want them anymore. Is there a way to ask Google to remove these pages entirely.
SEO Learn Center | | mayanksaxena0 -
Google plus provides dofollow or nofollow backlinks?
I see my webmaster full of backlinks coming from sites like Google.com(plus) Twitter.com(tweets) Stumbleupon chime Scoop.it 1.Are these backlinks follow or nofollow? 2.Follow or nofollow backlinks surely do not pass PR effect but do the nofollow backlink helpful in rank or not?
SEO Learn Center | | csfarnsworth0 -
How do I get google to crawl white papers that displays a form for human visitors?
How do I get Google to crawl white papers that displays a form for human visitors? I have been looking into this and understand that I need to set the form up as a GET form which has been done. Google said they want you to "avoid" forms that require personal information but to what extent do they want you to do that? The form is used as a lead generator so we need to collect information such as name, company name, email, ect.The information we require currently is: Name, Company name, Email, Phone Number and Number of employees. Once a user puts in their information they have access to the rest of the content and they don't need to re-enter the information in so I assume once Google gets past this feature they can gain access to the rest of the content. I understand that I need to have a form that doesn't ask for personal information which is the dilemma. So what should we do to work around this? Is there a solution that will allow me to obtain some personal information while still allowing Google to crawl the pages? Thoughts and any feedback is much appreciated, TJ
SEO Learn Center | | SEO_com0 -
Machine Learning - Randomness in Search Engine Ranking Algorithms
I believe, sometimes you may 'deserve' the first position, but get #3. And of course, sometimes you may deserve #3 and instead be #1. All due to a 'randomness factor' in search engine algorithms. I've been holding this hypothesis for quite sometime. Really, it started when I learned about SEOmoz using machine learning to better investigate SEO best practices. I suddenly found myself wanting to learn more about machine learning, and the implications of using it for SEO. I'm by no means able to utilize machine learning myself, but I it appears unsupervised learning would have a real chance of cracking search engine algorithms. Hey, even Stuxnet was cracked! Surely Google/ Bing would know (and account for) this, right? We can agree they'd obviously prefer a highly skilled mathematician not be able to crack the code. Therefore, I'm led to believe that search engines use some sort of randomness in their rankings. Maybe not much. Perhaps not all the time. But if a random percentage of search results, had a random variable of sorts included in their calculations... wouldn't that be enough to prevent the vast majority of cracking attempts? Thoughts, opinions, criticism? Thanks.
SEO Learn Center | | DonnieCooper0